Much as Nissan has done for most of its lineup, the 2012 Murano will carry over its 2011 prices, starting at $30,100, including $810 for destination and handling.For those 301 Benjamins coming from your bank account, Nissan will sell you a front-wheel-drive Murano S. Stepping up to a Murano SV, which adds a dual-pane moonroof, automatic headlights, roof rails, and Bluetooth hands-free calling among a list of other features will cost $33,670. An 8-gigabyte music hard drive, a driver’s seat with memory settings, and rain-sensing wipers cost come in the $37,210 Murano SL, and the top-tier Murano LE carries a base price in front-wheel-drive configuration. Adding all-wheel drive costs an additional $1600 across the board.New for this year is the Nissan Murano Platinum Edition, outfitted with 20-inch wheels, an in-dash navigation system, and an exclusive sapphire black paint color. The price for the package is $2020 in addition to the cost of the Murano LE.Moving to the vehicle so absurd you wonder why anyone thought of doing it, the Murano CrossCabriolet, will set you back $45,350. While that’s a lot of coin to cough up, it’s $1850 less than last year’s model. That slash in price comes from the fact that the Murano’s hard drive-based navigation system — standard last year — moves to the options list. Otherwise, it’s largely unchanged going into its second model year.Both the 2012 Murano hardtop and CrossCabriolet are already on sale at Nissan dealerships nationwide.Source: Nissan

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